Public speaks out on Crystal Cove State Park
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Paul Clinton
CORONA DEL MAR -- Last time, it was an ambush. This time, cooperation
was in the air at a public meeting about the historic district in Crystal
Cove.
More than three months after hundreds of locals packed Lincoln
Elementary School’s auditorium to oppose plans for a luxury resort on the
state-owned land, a less ornery group revisited the place to discuss the
future of the 46 historic bungalows in Crystal Cove State Park.
Leaders of environmental groups, concerned citizens and even those
living in the cottages voiced their opinions at the first in a series of
workshops scheduled by California State Parks.
One of those who spoke was heiress Joan Irvine Smith, whose family
owned the land for more than 100 years. Smith, calling the rustic
district “an island in time” joined others in calling on state parks to
restore the cottages as well as increase public access to the beach.
After buying out a San Francisco developer, the California State Parks
Department has restarted the process to seek ideas for an alternative
project at the historic district. The stating point will be the state’s
1982 General Plan that had been shelved after the agency signed a
contract with Mike Freed in 1997 to build the resort.
Freed was paid $2 million for those development rights in the March
buyout.
Due to their historic status, state parks officials pledged to
adequately restore the cottages, some of which are vacant.
State parks officials welcomed the input from those who attended the
meeting.
“We can save Crystal Cove, but saving Crystal Cove must contain those
cottages,” state historic preservation officer Knox Mellon said. “State
parks is committed to that.”
The state bought the historic district in 1979 from the Irvine Co. for
$32.6 million. The dwellings, built in the 1920s and 1930s, were placed
in the National Register of Historic Places that same year.
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